F-Droid is a repository of verified free and open source Android apps, a client to access it, as well as a whole “app store kit”, providing all the tools needed to set up and run an app store. It is a community-run free software project developed by a wide range of contributors. This is their story this past week.

Buildserver upgrade to Debian Stretch nearing completion

@uniqx’s big buildserver update to Stretch has been merged, and has been successfully validated on jenkins.debian.net. @CiaranG has indicated that he is ready to update, so this will go live on our production buildserver very soon! This is a huge upgrade that we’ve been working towards for a long time. Once it’s in, it should be easier for us to add apps (less complicated recipes), and allow us to include more apps that we were previously unable to build.

SET Anti-Feature bug

We’ve had many reports that random apps started sprouting a mysterious “SET” Anti-Feature, sometimes even more than one! It is a mistake and should not be there. We are well aware of this bug now, so thank you for your all reports. ;) The fix is tested and just waiting to be deployed. You can read about the gory details in issue 565.

Basebox images hosted by Vagrant

We now have some pre-built basebox images up for you to play with! These are graciously hosted by Vagrant, and should make setting up your own buildserver a lot easier.

Fdroiddata statistics

@_hc has made some pretty graphs for you to look at! This is is a visualisation of our fdroiddata repository, which contains all our app metadata. It is interesting to see that the number of new files has been steadily rising, even though the total commits per year has actually gone down. This could well mean that we have gotten more efficient, according to @_hc.

It is scheduled to update once a week.

New apps

Rocket.Chat is in! We’ve mentioned this briefly in TWIF 16, and now @Bubu’s work is paying off even as he is on vacation.

Note that the app is without push notifications right now, so you’ll have to enter the app to see if there’s anything new. The developers seem to be interested in exploring non-FCM push though. Maybe they can take inspiration from Tutanota’s solution.

Soft Sound: Play relaxing sounds to help you sleep, concentrate or stay calm.

Updated apps

In total, 68 apps were updated this week. Here are the highlights:

Activity Diary lets you log and plan your recurring activities. In version 1.3.1 tracking of position was added (needs activation in settings and is not yet used for proposing next activities). Also added was a pie chart for statistics, simplified pausing: last finished activities get a higher priority, improved searching, and several bugfixes.

Tutanota enables you to send end-to-end encrypted emails to anybody with a tip of your finger. Version 3.37.1 will remember your language choice for external recipients, supports “cancel” and “confirm” hotkeys in dialogs, and has lots of bug fixes.

FeaturedMastalab is on fire this week with 4 releases! Version 1.13.3 supports the Trunk API, which lets you mass-follow users by category, with just a few simple taps. Ideal for newcomers. Other new features:

Customize notification sound

Custom emoji in the main menu

Automatically expand hidden media (default no)

Long click on the compose button to pick up another account

Compact mode is now the default

Follow instance button can be hidden

Improved UX with more text

Markor, 1.2.0 is out. Your favourite markdown editor and TODO app now has launchers to directly open LinkBox/ToDo/QuickNote, context aware search for projects, preview for ToC and KaTex math, and improved markdown conversion, notably GFM-like table parsing and underlined h1. Read about even more improvements in the blog post.

LTE Cleaner (FOSS) had major updates this week, going from 2.3 to 3.1.0 in 5 releases! New features include a “one click clean” option, simplified filter options, an “aggressive filter”, Chinese (traditional) language support, and many smaller changes and bug fixes.

WaveUp: “Just wave your hand over the proximity sensor of your phone to turn the screen on.” Version 2.2.0 contains under-the-hood changes, converting the code base to Kotlin, and updating some dependencies.

General feedback can also be sent via Mastodon, or, if you’d like to have a live chat, you can find us in #fdroid on Freenode, on Matrix via #freenode_#fdroid:matrix.org or on Telegram. All of these spaces are bridged together, so the choice is yours. You can also join us on the forum.